Saturday, October 22, 2016

1942

Here's a diverse set of photos from World War II, courtesy of Anti-Worlds.

 A British soldier gives a defiant “V” sign to German POWs captured at the Second Battle of El Alamein during the Western Desert Campaign. Near El Alamein, Egypt. 26 October 1942
[that V sign also has another meaning in the British world, equivalent to the middle finger]
  
 Australian soldiers of the 2/9th Light Anti-Aircraft Battery, Royal Australian Artillery position a  Bofors 40 mm anti-aircraft/multi-purpose autocannon at a possible enemy Imperial Japanese plane during the Battle of Milne Bay, Papua, September 1942
  
 British soldiers pose with a Bofors 40 mm anti-aircraft gun while defending Malta from Axis aerial attacks in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations. Valletta, Malta. 12 May 1942
  
 Four unidentified American Doolittle Raid crewmen, who bailed out over China, are escorted through a Chinese village before being reunited with their unit. The Doolittle Raid  was the first air raid by the United States to strike the Japanese Home Islands. Most of the crew members who bailed out over China, either crash landed, or were shot down by the Japanese. The assistance given by the Chinese to the airmen spurred the Japanese Imperial Army to carry out a retaliatory action called the Zhejiang-Jiangxi Campaign; over the course of four months, entire Chinese villages were destroyed, and an estimated 250,000 Chinese civilians were killed. Unknown village, China. 18 April 1942
  
 Jewish children sit barefoot and in ragged clothing in 
Nowolipie Street in the Warsaw Ghetto. May 1942
  
 Jews in the Drohobych Ghetto are rounded by German troops 
for deportation to Belzec extermination camp. November 1942
  
 Maltese women go about their daily chores, washing laundry amidst 
the rubble caused by Axis Italian and German bombing. April 1942
  
Most of the remaining Jews in the town of Hanau are rounded up and forced 
to board trains bound eastward to concentration camps. May 1942

1 comment:

  1. My mother worked for 3 yrs as forced labourer in a factory a few Km from from Hauau - she remembers the bombing raid that leveled most of the city at the closing stages of the war - at that time she had fled from the factory barracks as there was talk that the advancing Russians who did not discriminate were not far away. She was taken in by a local farmer around 30Km away from Hanau - she said you could read a book at night by the light coming from the burning city.

    ReplyDelete